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tv   New Day  CNNW  September 7, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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>> you are filled with trivia. >> i got them online. so can you. i will tweet it. do you know who has a lot of work to do even hillary clinton. here is why. a new poll shows an incredible reversal. bernie sanders and joe biden making a move, especially in new hampshire. that is going to make a difference. >> on the republican side, more bragging rights for front-runner, donald trump. polls show him leading in new hampshire and iowa. we have the developments beginning with jeff on the campaign trail in see gar rapids, iowa. good morning, jeff. >> good morning, alisyn. hillary clinton is starting this labor day in a far different place than she expected to. did you think underdog would be used for her campaign? here in iowa, she leads bernie
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sanders some 11 points, but it's down from a 24-point lead in july. in new hampshire, she is down by nine points against senator bernie sanders. all of this comes as democrats are looking at vice president joe biden. is he going to jump in or not? there are signs they like what they see if he would. he has higher approval ratings in iowa. look at the number under registered voters. hillary clinton has a 30% approval rating against all voters and joe biden 40%. definitely better in the election match up there. yesterday, when hillary clinton was campaigning to a small group of voters, she made it clear how difficult this election is now going to be. >> it's going to be a hard election. the other side has said they will spend, do and say anything to win back the white house. i have a little experience with
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that. i am absolutely confident whatever they throw at me, i can throw it back. >> that is part of the strategy for the clinton campaign. whatever they throw at me, i can throw it back. we are going to see a stepped up campaign. she's going to give more policy speeches, more interviews, something she's not done a lot of already. chris, an interesting five months to come before the iowa caucuses. >> good numbers, good insight. thank you. stick around for us here. we want to talk republicans. very important. let's bring in the latest gop numbers. what do you have for us? >> that's right, chris. more momentum for donald trump and problems for bush here in new hampshire. trump has a commanding lead. he's leading at 28%.
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that's a seven-point pick up since july. two, john kasich has 12% support, followed by ben carson and carley fiorina. the numbers show a sharp decline for jeb bush. he's only at 8% here in new hampshire. meanwhile, in iowa, trump and carson are gaining a lot of ground. bush, again, he's losing half his support in iowa. he's polling at 6%. look at scott walker, too. he was once a leader in iowa, now polling at 5%. i caught up with scott walker, the former governor of wisconsin here in new hampshire as he was launching a motorcycle tour through the state. here is what he said about his decline. >> the person who won the primary four years ago was about that same point. we have every confident, like i said, there are going to be ups and downs along the way.
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we are to stay true to who we are and get our message out. >> many candidates will be out for a labor day parade. alisyn, a lot of candidates will want to hit the reset button after a long summer of trump. >> absolutely. thanks so much. let's talk about all this with jeff. we'll bring him back and bring in cnn politics executive editor, mark preston. mark, i want to start with you. you read tea leaves for a living. give us context. how unusual is what we are seeing in iowa where this or nn new hampshire, actually, bernie sanders is beating hillary clinton. >> it's not too surprising to see polls move up and down, down and up and what have you. what is surprising, as jeff said in his report is that bernie sanders is catching fire and he
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caught fire quickly. when you look at the lines, what campaign would you rather be part of? the sanders campaign, trend line going up or hillary clinton's going down? it is still early at this point and going to come down to money. really, the big variable is, does joe biden get into the race and what does that do to it? >> would you explain how john kasich can be surging in one poll and absent from those in iowa. what does that tell you about the different states of play there? >> chris, it's a big reminder, important reminder that primary elections are state by state, individual contests. john kasich is focusing on new hampshire. he's barely been in iowa. he's not spent money in iowa. his superpac hasn't spent money. in new hampshire they have. a few million dollars introducing himself. he believes new hampshire is more independent voters, more
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moderate. iowa is dominated by social conservatives. that's why new hampshire seems to be more of a fertile ground for him, if you will. at least he hopes it will at this point. he is focusing on the new hampshire side of things. the question now is, can you pick and choose which states you are running in. say he goes forward with this and does not finish in the top three, four, five, six, does that hurt him in new hampshire? we have to see about that. all candidates have to pass through here. that explains why he has a stronger lead in new hampshire. >> let's look at iowa and thousand democrats are doing in iowa. this part of the poll, the nbc poll is interesting. it shows now, today, versus what was going on in july. today, hillary clinton 38%, sanders 27%. joe biden, 20%. in july, look what happened. hillary clinton lost basically 10 percentage points there. look who's gained them, not
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bernie sanders, joe biden. joe biden is affecting her numbers more. >> what has joe biden done? he has taken the time limit off his decision. we thought it would be made in the next couple weeks and perhaps it will be. he said in atlanta, he is struggling with it and doesn't have a timetable. >>itis no surprise hillary clinton started in iowa. having done so, she's looking at new hampshire, which is considered clinton country. they have to really be concerned about what is going on there given the fact sanders is taking the lead. >> the conversation of what joe biden is dealing with, i think they will give him the time he wants. it is early. i can't ask any questions because she has the answers. >> let's look at the match ups
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we see with trump and bush versus clinton and do you care when i show you the iowa match ups, the new hampshire match ups. bush and trump are both beating clinton in those states. what does it mean and is there anything it does not mean? >> it is going to be a close, general election. at least as the possibility of a close, general election. we think, months ago, she may be in the driver's seat here. republicans have solidified around donald trump. the idea of a trump candidacy is no longer as sour to republicans as it was a few months ago. of course we know republicans and some of the independents don't necessarily like hillary clinton and they would back trump over here. remember six weeks or so ago, chris, she was leading all the republican candidates by 30 percentage points or so. all that is over.
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the republicans have -- all of them don't like trump. one in four do, which is more than most others. they certainly like him more than hillary clinton. >> is it important in the long run? >> ask me labor day next year. it's more important then than now. >> i'll make a note to do that. is this about the e-mail controversy or has something gone wrong in hillary clinton's campaign above and beyond that? >> certainly. i mean, it hasn't gone right. the e-mail controversy has exasperated a lot of ill feelings that voters have toward the clintons, the do as i say, not as i do montra. they have not handled the controversy well. we are going to see hillary clinton do more interviews, more public appearances. it's no surprise to see bernie sanders, he will do an interview
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when asked, as does donald trump and look who is in the top. the clinton campaign in doing a course correction on the e-mail situation. let's not forget, she is going to testify in october before the house committee that is looking into it. that will be interesting to see what happens. >> mark, jeff, thank you. guess what's happening next week and will be there. wednesday, september 16th, the cnn republican debate begins at 6:00 p.m. eastern. we'll have coverage from out there and after the debate. >> i'm going to keep the fires burning here. go, see how california is. >> we turn to the mounting crisis. breaking this morning, france announced it will take an additional 24,000 refugees, this, while austria tightens emergency records. we begin our team coverage with cnn international correspondent arwa damon. she's along the serbia border
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where thousands more immigrants are expected to arrive. arwa? >> reporter: well, take a look at the scene here. they are already arriving and there seems to be no end to the flood. they are being blocked by the police force and what was a holding field. about a week ago, the wait here was around five, up to 12 hours. now, the families we were talking to, many of them have been waiting for the last 36 hours, some as long as six days. there's commotion happening throughout. people get, understandably, very agitated. they want to get on the buses and out of here. look how they have been having to live. there is no proper shelter here. there are no aid organizations to help them. the hungarian government refused the offer of assistance. some have tents, but it's bitter le cold at night.
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there is one small, local, nonprofit with a group of volunteers trying to help out. by and large, people are sleeping out in this field. as many of them will tell you, they hardly thought they would come through thegateway of europe and sleeping in a garbage pit. they don't understand why there is this delay. they don't understand why they are being held here. the hungarians are saying they need to process everyone, but they are unable to handle this influx. more and more people are crossing from serbia to hungary by the minute. >> thanks for showing us those desperate pictures. we want to go to turkey. overnight, the coast guard rescue add group of migrants at sea. this comes days after the body of the syrian toddler washed ashore. that's galvanized countries to do more.
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let's get to ivan watson in turkey. he witnessed this rescue. ivan? >> reporter: good morning, alisyn. if you thought the tragic images that shocked the world of the syrian refugee toddler who washed up on the beach here of turkey, his lifeless body just last wednesday. if you thought that was going to deter people desperate to get to nearby greece to europe, we saw the opposite last night. if anything, we saw several overloaded inflatable rubber dinghies. they were rescued making the jor knew to the greek nearby island. they were overfilled. extremely dangerous conditions, rescued fwi turkish coast guard. what was incredible is to see one of these with people on board, including five children,
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five frightened kids z and their parents are so debt pratt and determined to try to get to europe they were willing to risk everything to set out on this overloaded little boat to try to make the journey some two miles through dangerous matters with a pathetic motor to try to get to greece. the rescue workers they say they have seen hundreds of people a night trying to depart from this beach and the beaches around it to try to get to greece. since two boys and a mother died out here four days ago, they have tried to crack down. it's not stopped some debt pratt people from trying to flee to get physical security oreck nomic security. what they think they can achieve in europe.
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>> they are saying there must be a better way. when will they find one? as we turn to the u.s., you haven't heard our leaders being very loud about what to do. the pope is stepping up. he's calling on catholic institutions in europe to take in one family of refugees, each, to provide hope for those fleeing from syria. with more than 25,000 parishes in italy and more in nermny, that could provide tens of thousands of people with a sanctuary. thousands of mourners including police officers from around the country are expects in illinois. there are have been a public viewing. he was shot and killed last week in the line of duty. meanwhile, a manhunt continues for the three suspects. detectives found new evidence at the crime scene. so far new york city arrests. kim davis, the clerk who
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refused to issue same-sex marriage licenses is appealing. according to court documents, the appeal was filed by liberty council, a nonprofit ministry and seeks for him mediate relief. walter palmer, the man accused of killing a protected lion in zimbabwe is speaking out. we have the details. >> interesting indeed. in his sit-down with the associated press and the star tribune, he said this is the only interview they are doing. he is looking for a sense of privacy. he did not allow cameras to take video or pictures of him during the interview. breaking his silence in his first interview, the minnesota dentist who sparked an international fire storm after killing cecil the lion on an african safari.
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walter has kept out of the public eye. he will resume work at his sub burr ban minneapolis office. he said about his wife and daughter, they have been threatened in social media. again, i don't understand that level of humanity to come after people not involved at all. since facing worldwide backlash after the hunt, including a clamoring cry by his extradition, palmer has not been charged with a crime. in previous statements, he said he relied on his expertise of his guide. he insisted the hunt was legal, saying if i knew the lion had a name, obviously, i wouldn't have taken it. palmer didn't address whether he would return to zimbabwe for
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questioning. he said it has been a wonderful country to hunt in and i have always followed the laws. though he isn't facing charges, two people who facilitated the hunt are. >> it's interesting to hear from him, finally. he is saying it was a mistake. >> he is saying that he regrets killing the lion, but it wasn't illegal. >> i have to imagine he's expecting protests and reaction to him heading back to work. >> right. i think it's part of the reason he didn't allow cameras. he's asking for privacy for his family. is it too much for us? if there is no law broken by him, if he was just hunting, a lot of people don't like hunting, a lot do. is enough enough? >> now that we have heard from him, i think it helps. the fact he was silent for so long, we wanted answers. >> would you have been in a rush of people threatening him? it's interesting, this is his
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only interview. if he opened himself more and given more story, he may have elicited more passion, especially to his family. >> thank you. a new presidential candidate is throwing his hat in the ring for 2016. we didn't have enough. we will talk about why he's running and his unusual campaign promise, next. just might be the one. to clean the oceans, to start a movement, or lead a country. it may not be obvious yet, but one of these kids is going to change the world. we just need to make sure she has what she needs. welcome to windows 10. the future starts now for all of us. what you're doing now, janice. blogging. your blog is just pictures of you in the mirror.
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jefferson's truth that all are created equal has become the mean thag some are more equal than others. this inequality shows itself in 1,000 ways. it's why we must say black lives matter. it's why congress bends over backwards to benefit campaigns. it's why a huge proportion of us don't waste our time voting. it's why the system, as elizabeth warren puts it, is rigged. >> what money gives and takes away is what is driving harvard professor to run for president. that was his video announcement
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we heard here. he has a unique promise, if he achieves his goal, he would resign and hand over power to his vice president, who should be picked at the convention. joining us now, professor lawrence. have you considered the slogan, less is more when it comes to money and politics? >> that was suggested. we are getting lots of ideas. i think it would work. >> you are trying to draw attention to an obvious problem, put meat on the bones. then the 2012 election cycle, unions, the top ten unions gave $270 million, no, more. 270,865,644. that is the number in 2012 election, not just the presidency. superpacs gave in the 2012 election cycle.
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828,224,700. huge numbers of money in politics. what do you think its effect is on the system and how do you think it can be stopped? >> yeah, i mean, you know, let's keep very simple facts at the center of this argument. what our government does has no connection to what the average voter wants. after sandy hook, 89% of americans said they wanted legislation for background checks. 84% of the gun owners wanted background check. congress did not. through obama's administration, a majority of americans wanted congress to address climate change. they haven't done anything. the richest americans, hedge fund owners pay the lowest tax rates in america. congress has done nothing. again and again, what america wants, congress doesn't do because the system is broken.
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the democracy is broken. we have to finally push pause on this partisan fight and say, what are regoing to do to fix this corrupted, broken system? that's what this campaign is about. >> you see that bleeding in the issue with black lives matter and if you were to get into a debate, i know that's somewhat of a clever proposition to deal with here. you can address any issue that faces the u.s. government because you believe money is at the core of the moves? >> it's not just me, it's american people, too. a poll of 96% of americans said it was important to reduce the influence of money and politics. everybody understands this, but the politicians don't want to talk about it. they are embarrassed about the fact they, themselves are dependent on this. >> i cannot disarm. you hear it again and again. it's legal. you are a professor, you know.
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you were a clerk for justice scalia. they made superpacs a reality in politics among other changes. what can we do, if that's the law, you are allowed to give as much money as you want? >> well, you are right. everybody says they can't unilaterally disarm, but they have to talk about what changes would fix the system. the supreme court created a huge part of the problem. that is not the core of the problem. the core of the problem is how we fund campaigns and congress could fix that problem tomorrow. it just had the political will. it will only have the political will if we have a campaign that focuses on the fundmental factor, no connection between what the government does and the average voter wants. we have to restore that. we are in no sense a
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representative of democracy. they would say let's focus on the problem. >> would say. you are in the race. you had to raise money online. so, you raised $1 million. you need the money to be in the race. that's part of the problem that you are pointing out. let me ask you this, though. why do you need to run for president to get this issue out? we hear about it on the democratic side from senator sanders. we have hillary clinton that is going to come out with a proposal. they are on your team and talking about it. why get into the race? >> because, look, everybody is talking about this like we are discussing what we are going to do at the beach. are we going to go to the park? are we going to spend time at restaurants? look, the car is broken down. somebody stole the battery. grandma put an extra driving wheel in the backseat. we have to face the fact, first, that the system doesn't work. i love what the democrats are
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talking about. i love the candidates in this race on my side of the line. i think all of them would be great presidents. if they don't tell us how they are going to fix this first, nothing they are talking about is credible, chris. nothing they are imagining is possible. they need to tell us how they will be day one candidates. how on day one, they will address this corrupt system so everything is plausible. they have to be, this is what we will address, first. that's what i'm trying to do in this campaign, to make it clear, i would address it first. it's the only thing. i would do this and i would step aside so, if people vote for me, it would be for one reason. when i'm elected, there would be no ambiguity about what people said congress must do. >> you have said, if one of the candidates to your satisfaction makes this commitment, then your race would no longer be necessary. let's see if your entree and your pushing changes.
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do you have a clarification of that position? >> no, what i said is the leading candidates. i need to know the democratic nominee will make this issue day one. >> professor, thank you very much. it is certainly an important issue. now, it will be getting more attention with your candidacy and quick ability to raise money online. >> i like that. new england patriots tom brady opening up about deflategate. what he had to say about winning the appeal of the suspension.
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what did iran's supreme leader get in the nuclear deal? to start with, $100 billion. they keep their nuclear facilities and ballistic missiles. there won't be surprise anytime-anywhere inspections. and after ten years, restrictions are lifted and iran could build a nuclear weapon in two months. congress should reject a bad deal. we need a better deal. on the internet... of things. what we're recommending as your consultants... the new consultants are here. it's not just big data... it's bigger data. we're beta testing the new
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internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. time for cnn money now, your money. christine romans is here. what are you seeing today? >> u.s. markets are closed, but beijing says, hey, the chinese bubble is over and the market disagrees. the first day of trading and the
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shanghai dropped 2.5%. the chinese central bank said the process is nearly complete. investors said, not so much. here in the u.s., investors are obsessed with when they will raise interest rates. until then, folks, rates are still rock bottom. 30 year fixed rate mortgages, averaging 6.8%. a fix that a lot of people use for a refinancing tool. you can see why that is there. procrastinating your refi, now is the time to act. if you are hitting the road, this should make the drive easier. this is the cheapest labor day gas price in 11 years, 11 years. $2.40 is the national average, $2.05 in my hometown. >> you say refinery issues or sticking it to us in the big
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cities? >> i don't know. your price is 1 cheaper this year, chris. >> i see it. >> christine, thank you so much. let's look at a few more headlines. hillary clinton is the underdog in new hampshire. a new nbc news poll shows democratic rival bernie sanders leading by nine points in new hampshire. he is dramatically getting clinton in iowa, cutting her lead by more than half since july. meanwhile, on the republican side, show donald trump maintaining his lead in iowa and new hampshire. >> france announcing it will take in 24,000 new refugees to ease the crisis ripping europe. this, as thousands of migrants made their way to germany after boarding trains in austria. at the same time, officials are saying they are going to tighten emergency measures for migrants. what does that mean? they are going to do it in a humane way that complies with the law. this is a wait and see situation.
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an investigation under way into an ambush style shooting on police officers in las vegas. police say a man with a semiautomatic weapon approached two officers in their patrol car at a traffic light. one officer shot in the hand. he is recovering. the suspect is in custody. this is the second las vegas police officer shot in the past few days. on this labor day, president obama is expected to roll out a new executive order in boston. it requires federal contractors to offer employees up to seven paid sick days a year. it could help 300,000 workers. it will help them negotiate equal pay. >> two high school football players were captured tackling an official. we have more on the bleacher report. i don't think i have ever seen this before. maybe it was kind of like the scene in "the longest yard." what about you, you were a pro?
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>> never seen anything like this in my career. both students were defensive players on the high school team in san antonio. two players from the same team were e jejected earlier in the game. here is the video. a player comes out from nowhere. he blindsides the official, violently knocking him down. his teammate dives in while he's lying on the ground. here is another angle. they are investigating the incident. there's no word on whether or not the official suffered injuries. all right. for the first time since the deflategate scandal, tom brady spoke publicly. he seems to be happy as most football fans. for now, less deflategate and more football. >> obviously, i have a lot of personal feelings. but, i really don't care to share those. i have had so much support for my family through all this. for the last 20 years i have
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been playing football this time of year and it feels good to be able to do that again. look out, serena williams moved a step closer to the calendar grand slam. it's the best she's played thus far at the u.s. open. she will now face her sister, venus tuesday night in the quarterfinals. her excellence is unfathomable. >> you sounded like clyde frazier there. well done, my friend. well done. >> thanks, chris. >> is there a question in your mind, looking a t the video tape, they did that on purpose? >> no doubt about it. it will be interesting to see what was the impotence. were coaches involved? we will see in the coming days. >> could be an assault charge because it's outside the game.
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presidential candidates long complained about gotcha questions, right? fair or unfair, they complain. donald trump tripped up when asked about foreign policy. he calls it a gotcha. gotcha or gaffe? does it matter to you if you are a trump supporter? we discuss. when heartburn comes creeping up on you. fight back with relief so smooth and fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue. and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. tum-tum-tum-tum-tums smoothies, only from tums. hey pal? you ready? can you pick me up at 6:30? ah...
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mike huckabee. i ask even straight, hard questions. i have no favorites or disfavorites. i may put some people at a disadvantage. it's my life to be prepared with foreign policy. i spent time talking about the teams. i spent two hours with mike -- >> that was conservative radio host, hugh hewitt and he will be asking questions at the debate next week. trump says he was playing gotcha with the questions he asked. it has a long history in presidential politics. let's look at some of the most famous. we want to bring in errol lewis, an anchor. good to see you. >> you, too, good morning. >> let's look at the most famous gotcha questions.
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i want to start with george w. bush at the 2000 election. he was asking questions similar to what he asked donald trump. this was from andy hillard about world leaders, watch this. >> can you name the president of tehran? >> yeah, lee. the pakistan general, just elected. not elected, he took over office, appears he's going to bring stability to the country. i can't name the general. >> general. >> and the prime minister of india? >> the new prime minister of india is, ah, no. >> same thing that tripped up donald trump. >> a brilliant response from george bush, the camera doesn't lie. you are going to get caught out there, if you try to fake it. if you don't know, say you don't know. most people, reasonable voters and other viewers would understand that. ime not sure why it didn't work
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for donald trump. i don't have that. >> didn't donald trump actually go a step further? i don't know today, but when i get in there, i'm going to get a guy that knows how to do this and i'm going to know more than you? >> that's a trumpian response. say i don't know today, check in with me tomorrow. it's not a big deal. nobody expects you to know everything, not at this early stage of the game. give us a sense that it at least matters. don't disparage the question. >> here was an iconic moment from the election with john mccain and sarah palin where katie couric asked sarah palin what magazines she read. you would think it's a softball question, but turned out not to be. >> any of them that have been in
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front of me over the years. i have a vast variety of sources where we get our news. alaska isn't a foreign country where it's kind of suggested, it seems like, wow, how could you keep in touch with the rest of washington, d.c., may be thinking and doing. >> basically, what she said is she found that question demeaning, like what newspapers do you read. was that a gotcha question? >> no, of course not. in fact, she could have responded with something closer to the truth, i read summeries my staff gives me. he was a governor at the time. maybe she doesn't have time to sit around and read the newspaper. maybe she's five time zones behind and doesn't get it in time. maybe she listens to the radio. there are different truthful answers one could give. if she understood the question, i think she would have realized, give us a sense of how you take in information. however it is, tell the truth. i don't know why so many
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politicians have a hard time with that one. it would have really worked out better if she would have simply done that. >> here is a question. from this current election that was posted to hillary clinton, it was from terry gross. hillary clinton sounds like she thinks this is a gotcha question. itis about why she appears to have flip-flopped her stance on gay marriage. >> you could not be having this sweep of marriage equality across the country if nobody changed their mind. thank goodness so many of us have. >> that's one for you changed your mind? >> i really have to say, i think you are being very persistent, but playing with my words -- >> i'm trying to clarify so i can understand. >> no, i don't think you are trying to clarify. i used to be opposed, now i am in favor and did it for political reasons and that's flat wrong. >> why is that not fair of a
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question? >> her very words you just played. many of us change our minds, you know? when did that happen? how did you do it? you know, hillary clinton, i think, was probably accurately realizing that her political opponents might take whatever she was to say and say she's a flip-flopper and changed her mind. some of this we have to put back on the voters. there's something about voters where they don't want to see anybody change their mind. they expect candidates to have changed their minds. >> errol, we will leave it there for today. we will have more as the campaign continues. >> for the first time since the suspension was overturned, tom brady is talking about deflate gate. you will hear more.
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i'll be out there thursday night. obviously been a long seven months for everybody. but, i think now the goal is to focus on what my job is and what i need to go out there and do to win. >> that's new england patriots tom brady speaking out for the first time after the judge threw out the four-game suspension. they are getting ready to play. let's bring in the one and only christine brennan. i love to see you in person. how do you think it is going to be perceived? >> whatever the decimal level is. that is the home game for tom
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brady. everyone else has been concerned, is he cheating, is he not? in this case, they have been on his side. to see him out on the field, oh, my gosh. it is going to register probably on the richter scale. >> legacy questions come up. how will this chapter be seen and how will its effect be felt? do you think there's going to be little, as chris would say, stink on the nfl? >> i think on the league, yes. and he'll be booed on the other stadiums. the patriots have a history with spygate and now this. the judge ruled in favor of tom brady, he did not say he was innocent. somehow the footballs ended up being deflated. the employee who is are no longer working with the patriots. something happened. a lot of people are wondering if brady isn't a cheater even though he got off on a technicality. >> he referenced that. he was speaking of the two other employees he spoke about.
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>> it's been a very tough situation for everybody and it's put a lot of stress on everybody's families. if anybody is in the position we have been put in. hopefully we can, you know, just keep learning from life experiences. i certainly feel terrible for, you know, them, if they are not able to be with us. >> it's affected more than just him. did it feel sincere, his apology? >> he is the boy next door, mr. clean. he is still mr. clean. but, you hope someone is helping those people who are obviously no longer working. maybe brady is working to do something financially. >> the question is goodell, right? the suspension is not upheld. does he lose his standing, his bravado in all of this? does it affect his legacy?
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>> the only thing that matters is the owners. roger goodell isnot going rogue here. he is not doing it on his own. they are now 0 for 5 on these legal battles. the nation has spoken out wanting tougher penalties. the league is doing that. literally, 52 weeks to the day. that happened on september 8. 52 weeks ago today. the nation wanted tougher penalties. now, there's the rebukes in the courts. on and on it goes. it's not over. the nfl appealed. we will see what happens there. goodell is not acting on his own. as long as the owners want him to be doing what he is doing, he will keep doing it. >> thank you for joining us so early. a lot going on this morning. let's get to it. >> i always thought this was going to be a competitive primary and i welcome that. >> bernie sanders surging past hillary clinton. >> voters are beginning to look for alternatives.
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>> more momentum for donald trump and big trouble for jeb bush. >> this is going to be a close, general election. >> kim davis is appealing the ruling. >> she's not running a church. >> i think she should follow the law. >> she's not jailed. >> the mounting migrant crisis that is mounting europe. >> the silhouettes of 20 people stranded in a rubber boat. they are desperate, frightened. >> it's an accident waiting to happen. announcer: this is "new day" can chris cuomo, alisyn camerota and michaela pereira. >> good morning. welcome back to your "new day." happy labor day. thank you for spending it with us. we begin with hillary clinton struggling in new hampshire. a new poll shows democratic rival bernie sanders overtaking her and her lead in iowa slipping. >> big developments in the gop as well. yes, trump has a lead and that's
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growing. there's a new name in play as well. let's get the developments for you. let's begin with senior washington correspondent jeff in iowa. tell us about the poll? >> good morning, chris. hillary clinton is starting this labor day in a far different place than they thought she would be. underdog is attached to her name in new hampshire. sanders is beating hillary clinton by nine points in this poll. itis not just this poll. it's a combination of polls so he has a commanding lead in new hampshire. not the same in iowa. she's leading sanders by 11 points. that is down from 24 points, just about six weeks ago. she is losing ground and he is gaining ground in both states. as this is happening, of course, this poll shows interesting numbers about joe biden. he has a higher favoribility rating than hillary clinton among democrats and among general election voters overall.
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it's important to remember, she still is liked by a majority of democrats, more than 6 in 10 democrats give her a favorable rating. it's the general election numbers, 30% overall, which has a lot of independents and republicans don't like her. she knows that. she was on the trail in cedar rapids, iowa and addressed the challenges ahead. let's take a listen. >> it's going to a hard election. the other side has said they will spend, do and say anything to win back the white house. i have a little experience with that. i am absolutely confident that whatever they throw at me, i can throw it right back. >> that, of course, is hillary clinton's strength in many ways. when she is back on her heels, she's known as a fighter. democrats want to see more fight from her. we will see that coming up. alisyn? >> jeff, stand by. we will be back with you in a
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moment. meanwhile for republicans in new hampshire and iowa, trump is still on top. jeb bush lost almost half of his supporters in new hampshire since july. we are live in new hampshire with the latest gop numbers. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, alisyn. there is momentum for donald trump and trouble for jeb bush here in new hampshire. trump still has a big lead. this new poll shows he's up 28%. he's picked up seven percentage points in the last month. meanwhile, number two is john kasich with 12% followed by ben carson and carley fiorina. the numbers are not good for bush. there is a sharp dive in new hampshire. he's polling at 8%. in iowa, trump is still on top, but we are seeing in iowa, ben carson gaining some ground there. again, in iowa, jeb bush seeing sharp decline there, too, like in new hampshire. he's only polling at 6% in iowa.
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scott walker, too, he just, last month led the pack in iowa. he's polling at 5%. here in new hampshire, i caught up with scott walker while he was launching a motorcycle tour and asked him about the decline. >> the person who won the primary four years ago is about that same point. we have every confidence, like i said, ups and downs and polling along the way. our key is stay true to who we are and get our message out. >> reporter: many candidates will use this labor day to hit the reset button like jeb bush who recollects, here in new hampshire, will go up with the tv ad of the campaign. he is going to be spending half a million dollars here in new hampshire. >> thank you very much. appreciate it. let's bring back jeff and get into a conversation with former senior adviser bill clinton democratic strategist. jeff, take us through what you see in the numbers as indicative
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at the state of play for hillary clinton and see if there are answers to the woes. >> it's important to point out a couple things, chris. she is liked by democrats. there's no question about that. we are not seeing the bottom fall out among democratic supporters. she has a high favorable rating among democrats, some 6 in 10 or 7 in 10 democrats like her. the questions about her candidacy persist. the democrats are wondering if joe biden is jumping in looking at the polls overall. registered voters say 33% of supporters. favorable ratings are potential problems in the long term. in the short term, she's strong here. it depends, of course, what joe biden is going to do. that is the open question hanging over and how she adapted to sanders. she's gone from the summer of sanders to someone she has to contend with. >> let's pull up what's going on
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in new hampshire. this is interesting. sanders up 10%. he has 41%. that is higher than hillary clinton. joe biden gets 16%. look what happened since july. he's gone up 10% and she has gone down 10%. what is happening here, richard? >> the race on the democratic side has become the summer has become about hillary's e-mail practices. i think what you are seeing is, how would any of us fair if we spend three months going through our e-mails? >> you think those numbers are a result of what's going on with her e-mail? >> i do. i think they are a result of the pressure she's been under from the media, her opponents both in the race and on the republican side and congress. this constant drip, drip, drip. i think that it's obviously been a difficult summer for her. but, but, i think we always thought the race would be competitive. i thought it would be. i think we are seeing fluidity in it now. i think she is better positioned
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than anybody else on the democratic side and better positioned to be president overall. i think it's not quite right to say she is struggling. let's look at the poll, too. i wouldn't read too much into the poll. it's a small sampling in iowa and new hampshire. there's a plus or minus margin of -- it's within the margin of error. it seems like a big percentage. the margin of error is 5%. i think there are a lot of polls. there are going to be a lot of polls. >> but trending. here is the legitimate issue you have to deal with if you are in the campaign. she does not have the passion behind her right now among democrats. many thought she was the presumptive favorite. bernie sanders has that mantle of the heart of the party in the current state of play. how does she take that from him
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without going after sanders? >> i would dispute the premise a little bit. there are a lot of people, including myself that are excited and passionate about hillary clinton. there are a lot of women voters. >> crowds feeling the burn. >> i think sanders raises a lot of important issues. i think his issues here he is raising are exciting for the party. they play well in new hampshire and in iowa. i think once we get out of new hampshire and iowa, what other states could he win other than new hampshire? he's from vermont, a neighboring state. but, he had not been subjected to any kind of press scrutiny. listen, i'm on the show a lot, i like being here. when we are here, we talk about her e-mails. we never once talked about the challenges he has. >> what does he have? >> i don't know what he has. he hasn't been subjected to the press scrutiny. he's taken tough votes. once the record becomes more
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widely known, he will have questions asked. >> isn't part of the problem, when hillary clinton announced her candidacy, people around her said this time is going to be different. she learned her mistakes. this time, she is going to be accessible, relatable and we haven't been able to interview her for months. in other words -- >> thank you. thank you. >> there is something to that. when you can't have access to the candidate, it's hard to get past the, sort of, controversy of the day. >> i think we have seen a much more authentic hillary clinton. i think in the clips you have been showing this morning, she is speaking from the heart. i think her relationship with the press has been a central problem for her. you have to understand, she has a very long and unique relationship with the press. the press go at her in a way they do not go at anybody else. there's false reporting about the e-mail situation, "the new york times" reported there was a criminal inquiry and there never
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was. on the press side and the hillary clinton side, there are issues they have to overcome. i do think you will see her doing more interviews. i think you have to -- from her perspective, the press don't treat her fairly. she's going to have to get over that. >> very few politicians believe the media treats them fairly. >> i think the press is always fair. >> thank you very much. >> we hear there is going to be a significant change from the hillary clinton campaign. she's going to be out there more. what, specifically, do you think they are going to do next? >> the e-mail controversy is not going away. that will be the sound track this fall. they are going to add to it. she's giving more policy speeches. we are going to see her in more presidential-like settings starting with iran. the advisers want to send the message to democrats that she is the electable, presidential, serious candidate in the race here. that's how they are going to go after bernie sanders, drawing a
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contrast like that. she's going to be giving an iran speech wednesday. she will be on the ellen show tomorrow. she will be taping that and other network interviews coming up. she is coming out more in the post labor day phase. one thing about iowa and new hampshire, those are the only states he can win. remember 2008, barack obama won in caucus states in the west across the country. sanders is very strong in the caucus states. it is not simply iowa and new hampshire. this could be a long campaign. >> let her know we would love to have hillary clinton on "new day" anytime. you, too, richard. >> thank you. tune in tuesday to the cnn republican debate at 6:00 p.m. eastern. michaela? >> more legal action in the case of kim davis, the kentucky clerk that refuse zed same-sex marriage licenses. she is ea peeling the order that put her in jail. we turn to alexander field with
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more on this. >> she say this is is a heaven or hell matter for her. she cannot issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples because of religious convictions. she are you fuse zed to give them out. she's appealing that. mrs. davis is entitled to proper notice when threatened with the loss of her freedom. no indication she would be incourse rated. we will be presenting argument on appeal and asking for an expedited ruling. what does the attorney mean by that? the judge had the option to fine her but the judge didn't believe that would force her to comply with orders. instead he forced or ordered her deputy clerks to issue the marriage licenses. davis is refusing to authorize the licenses as prescribed by kentucky state law. she remains in jail. this whole thing touched a nerve. she's got a lot of supporters coming to her defense including
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mike huckabee, who is actually going to visit her in jail on tuesday. he plans to hold a rally on her behalf. chris? >> supporting the belief is one thing, supporting the actions is a different thing. thank you very much. we have breaking news for you this morning. france announcing they will take in 24,000 new refugees to ease the crisis in europe. austria announces they will end emergency for refugees. let's begin with arwa damon. she is along the serbian/hungary border. arwa, what is going on behind you now and is the situation showing better or worse control by the government there? >> reporter: it's getting a lot worse. right now, you have those who have crossed over from serbia into hungary who are fed up with having waited for a day, overnight, if not longer.
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many of them in the freezing cold, staging a sit in in front of the police. a short while ago, a fairly sizable scuffle as they try to push forward. down the road from here is a transit camp they are waiting for buses to take them. problem is, there's too many of them, the buses aren't coming fast enough. there's not proper food or water. the conditions at this camp are horrible. this man showing a small injury he got from the scuffle. if you come this way, quick, we can show you the conditions people are having to live in, it is exactly why they are so fed up with being here. i don't understand why even the most basic of things is not being provided for them. there's that one tent there where there's a medic and the aid being distributed. they have to live out here in this open field. as he is saying right now, it's
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garbage. they are living in garbage. you see the children there, the parnlts trying to offer them comfort that they can. a lot of them have been getting sick especially at night. as i was saying, it gets to be cold. this is not providing enough for them. they lack things like blankets and sleeping bags. many failing to understand this is how they are being treated when they finally reach europe, they thought their dignity and basic rights would be respected. >> your reports bring it vividly to life for us. thank you for that. we want to talk about what's going on in turkey. rescue crews saving a boatful of migrants. right near the beach where the toddler's body washed ashore. cnn senior correspondent ivan watson joined us from turkey. what did you see, ivan?
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>> reporter: good morning, alisyn. days ago, the world shocked to see the tragic images of a syrian refugee child. his body washed up lifeless after his family tried to cross the sea to a neighboring greek island. we saw turkish rescue teams going out after the family suffered awful loss of life. we saw other migrants not deterred trying to make that same, dangerous journey and be rescued by rescue crews, rescued from what could have been watery. under the spotlight of a turkish coast guard cutter -- >> you see the refugees? >> reporter: the sill wet of stranded migrants in a rubber boat. they are desperate, frightened.
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tonight, luckily saved by volunteers from the sea rescue association who work alongside the turkish coast guard. >> wait, wait. >> reporter: among the passengers rescued, five little children. just four days of the world was shocked by photographs of a syrian refugee toddler who drown at sea, these people have embarked on the exact same p periless journey. they set off from the turkish resort peninsula in hope of reaching greece instead of drifting at sea, these people will be brought back safely to turkey. the beaches below the villas and posh resorts an unlikely launching point for tens of thousands of refugees and migrants willing to risk
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everything to reach europe. under the light of the moon, we witness another attempt at a crossing. it's after 2:00 a.m. and we have encountered another little rubber dinghy loaded with people. they are actually paddling in the direction of greece. it's incredibly overloaded. this little boat. it's an accident waiting to happen. to make matters worse, somewhere, heavy backpacks over their life jackets. >> before possible disaster strikes, the coast guard comes to the rescue. tonight, they failed to reach greece, but they will live another day. now, the turkish government says in the last nine months, they have made at least 50,000 k rescues of migrants trying to make the journey. the rescue workers we traveled
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with last night say in the last month or so, they have counted the bodies of at least 12 other children that perished in this area making the journey with their families. we don't know how many people have died trying to make this desperate and dangerous journey. >> i will take it from here. thank you for the report. it is important for us to see. as we mentioned, this migrant crisis, is there a clear solution? we are going to take a look at what needs to be done. made a simple tripre chto the grocery storeis anything but simple. so finally, i had an important conversation with my dermatologist about humira. he explained that humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults saw 75% skin clearance. and the majority were clear or almost clear in just 4 months.
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the migrant crisis in europe reaching global urgency. the question remains, where will they go. over the weekend, thousands of refugees arrive from austria and germany. tens of thousands more migrants are trying to find shelter. joining us is former ambassador to nato. ambassador, thank you for being on "new day." >> thank you. >> the numbers are hard to pin down. as we have seen from the correspondents in the field, people are traveling under the cover of darkness. 4 million refugees have fled syria. so far, the u.s. accepted 1500 refugees from syria. how much responsibility do you think the u.s. should bear? >> alisyn, i think we have some
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responsibility. we are the wealthiest country in the world, we are an immigrant nation, refugee nation. traditionally, in these kind of humanitarian crisis, over decades, the united states takes over half the refugees the united nations calls to settle. the figure this year is to settle 130,000 syrian refugees. that means our quota is 65,000. the need is going to be far greater than that. there are 11 million homeless, half the syrian population. 4.7 million out of the country that remain in the country with the syrian civil war continuing to rage. it's being fueled by terrorist groups and the syrian government. expect more refugees. that means the united states needs to do much more. >> if you are saying the right number for the u.s. is 65,000 we have only taken a fraction of that. 1500 so far. what the officials in the u.s.
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say is the vetting process is very long and complicated. while, as you pointed out, there are stellar examples of people who were refugees who came on to be great leaders, there are terrible examples, the boston bombers were taken into this country as refugees. it is critical, is it not, to vet them to make sure there aren't some sort of isis members or extremists trying to sneak in? >> very definitely. we have always vetted refugees, always in the past. tough do that for criminal or terrorist activity. that has to happen now, particularly given the fact they are from syria. the great majority of these people are women and children. they have been affected by the civil war there. so, if the problem is vetting, then we need to put more resources into the vetting process. but, there's a humanitarian urgency here. as your report shows, people at risk of dying on this route
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overseas from turkey to greece. we have a self-interest and humanitarian interest to see that the united states does more and we do our part. you see that germany agreed to take in 800,000 refugees. our total 1500. that doesn't seem right. >> to your point, the root of this problem is the civil war in syria. so, what's being done to address that? >> well, as you know, the civil war has been produced by the assad government, terrorist groups like the islamic state. what has to happen is there has to be an international effort to see if there's a way to end the war to try to provide a path out of syria for bashar al assad, the ruler to try to convince russia and iran to diminish their support for him. see what a transitional government would look like. it may take a year or more. i commend secretary kerry and
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president obama for trying to start this process now. they are not being helped by the russian government. certainly, not being helped by iran, the major funder and armor to hezbollah of the syrian government forces. >> ambassador, thank you. we appreciate getting your wisdom on this. >> thank you. >> over to chris. >> it would be good to see when and if somebody steps up. thank you. bernie sanders is beating hillary clinton in new hampshire. yes, he's from vermont. this matters. and it is going to be a reason that hillary is changing her strategy. how? we'll tell you on inside politics, coming up. what you're doing now, janice. blogging. your blog is just pictures of you in the mirror. it's called a fashion blog, todd. well, i've been helping people save money with progressive's discounts. flo, can you get janice a job? [ laughs ] you should've stuck to softball! i was so much better at softball than janice, dad.
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i was going to the library to do my homework. it was a little bit of a walk to get to the bus stop. i had to wait in line to use the computer. took a lot of juggling to keep it all together. what's possible when you have high-speed internet at home? the library never closes. it makes it so much better to do homework when you're at home. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. new this morning, france announcing it will take in 24,000 refugees. this, as thousands of refugees made their way to germany this weekend after boarding trains in austria. austrian officials saying they are going to tighten emergency
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measures for migrants. the country's national railway plans to end special service to the hungarian border. more support for the iran nuclear deal. many would be against the deal says she will vote for it. chairwoman and florida congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz. coleman powell supporting his deal. congress will take up the plan this week. a california kayaker fishing off malibu's beach surviving a major scare after a hammer head shark attacked. it chomped down on his foot. they noticed the ten footer circling. the good news, he is not expected to lose his foot. >> that is good news. it is time to get inside
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politics. let us analyze and scrutinize poll numbers that improve numbers. there's a new front on the culture war and deafening crisis. discuss, senior politics editor jackie and times political reporter, zeke. what is the headline take away out of this poll for you? >> bernie sanders has been gathering a lot of support when it comes to new hampshire. it's his home turf. it shows hillary is losing ground when you talk iowa. bernie might be behind her, but he's gaining and she's losing. i think that's why you see the clinton campaign spending more money and why you are going to see her on the campaign trail more. >> is she paying the price for her tactics or is this the natural ebb and flow, zeke miller? >> certainly, it's both of those things.
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first off, it is summer as we are hitting labor day. at the same time, summer hasn't been kind to her because of the disclosure of the use of a private e-mail server. sort of stumbles on the campaign trail on policy issues as well. >> if you don't like what they are talking about, give them something else to talk ability. she hasn't been doing interviews. they are going to change that strategy. see if it changes the narrative. trump and bush, both beating clinton in iowa and new hampshire. that's new. does it matter? >> you know, there is an ebb and flow to these things. bush also dropped low in the polls in some of these early states. it does matter in terms of, this was not happening a month ago. this show that is clinton, there is a sentiment out there, i mean she's popular among democrats. when you look at independents, she's starting to lose there. it has to have the clinton campaign worried.
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>> using the ebb and flow. >> there is an ongoing culture flow. do we have the sound from former governor huckabee about what's going on with the clerk in kentucky? do we? if we do, let's play it. play it. >> why people are so angry across the country, not just on this issue, but others, is that the ruling class has thumbed their nose at the very constitution. you have democrat who is ignored the law when it was the law to have traditional marriage. what is it that liberals choose the laws they support, but a county clerk in kentucky, acting on her faith is criminalizes, jailed without bail because she acted on her conscience and according to the only law in front of her. >> zeke miller, under the law, are you allowed to selectively apply licenses as a clerk? >> no, you are not. also, you know, where governor
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huckabee staked his position, there's a broad, almost assault by the judicial class by the judicial system against people of faith as well as the rest of the government. that puts him in the minority, within his own party. that's what he has to -- he's trying to rebuild his reputation on the republican party. that puts him at odds with the republican party and the general electorate as well. >> you don't see this as being a breath of life into that battle about religious freedom laws, you think it's him staking out that claim? okay. did you hear what the candidates have been saying about the migrant or refugee crisis? me neither. why are they so quiet about this? >> hillary clinton addressed this with andrea mitchell. hillary clinton was careful to say she advocated it when she was secretary of state, a
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position president obama opposed. she mentioned that, then said this is a world crisis and policy that is added to this. jeb bush attacked obama earlier in august on some of the conditions in syria and how the policies contributed to it. i would not be surprised because this is becoming more and more of a global crisis that we start hearing more about this. particularly at the cnn debate. i'm going to give ewe plug there. >> you know what jackie's problem is? she's too smart. where is the outrage of what's going on? this is exactly where you expect leaders to lead. do you think that there is a reluctance to discuss this because of the ongoing narrative about immigrants in america today? >> absolutely no doubt. this is where the republican party is caught between the humam khalil abu mulal al bal i balawi -- we have seen donald
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trump and others tap into this wing in the republican party around immigration and that discourse. for them to turn around and advocate the influx of refugees while well intentioned and probably something they can defend and gain support on. they don't necessarily want to risk it. they don't want to leave. they want to see where the public is. they want to see polls. >> zeke miller from "time", jackie from the daily beast. thank you for making me better this morning. the kentucky county clerk who refused to issue gay marriage licenses trying to get out of jail. stay with us for a discussion you do not want to miss. staying in rhythm...
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without the internet i would probably be like a c student. internet essentials from comcast has brought low-cost high speed internet into the homes of hundreds of thousands of low-income families. it lets students do homework and study at home. so far more than two million people across america have benefitted. internet essentials is going to transform the lives of families. i see myself as maybe an entrepreneur. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. i respect the fact that this lady doesn't agree. she's also a government employee, not running a church. i don't like the fact she's sitting in jail, that's just as absurd as well, but i think she
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should follow the law. >> that is john kasich defending the judge's decision to jail the clerk. mike huckabee supports the clerk. he plans to meet with her in jail on tuesday. she is behind bars for refusing to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples. here to explain is cnn legal analyst and mel robinson. mel? >> good morning, alisyn. >> explain legally, not morally, not ethically, but legally, can someone advocate their work responsibilities if asked to do something that violates their religious beliefs? >> well, i think that you can do it in very, very limited circumstances, alabama alisyn. if you have an orthodox jew and somebody wants a pork barbecue parade, they cannot, in their
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official capacity deny a license to a pa race because they don't agree with heating pork. however, they cannot be compelled to eat it personally if they are serving it at a lunch picnic. >> in other words, in this case in kentucky, she has to legally, you are saying, go against her view that marriage is between a man and woman. the court can compel her, legally, to feel great discomfort and issue those licenses? >> absolutely. there's a very big difference between exercises your personal religious liberties as a private citizen, alisyn and exercising your position as a agent of the government. stand in the schoolhouse door happened june 11, 1963 after brown versus board of education.
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the state of alabama ordered the university of alabama to be desegregated. governor george wallace blocked, stood, physically, in front of the entrance of that university blocking two black students from registering. what happened in that situation is the national guard showed up, the attorney general showed up, the president called. while the governor was uncomfortable and objected, based on his personal beliefs to the law of the land, he was compelled to step aside. he stood there and had been physically removed, he would have been jailed. >> i'm glad you bring up the civil rights issue. former governor, mike huckabee said, we have a long, proud tradition of civil disobedience and people being objectors to law. again, why is she in a different category because she is an agent
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of the county? >> correct. so, when she ran for office and she decided she wanted to be compensated by the citizens to be a clerk, which basically means she is supposed to do civil transactions in order to make the laws accessible to the people that are paying her, when she agreed to take on that job, alisyn, she agreed to serve as an agent of the government and left her personal beliefs at the door. what happens, you have to take a look at her rights as an individual to believe what she wants to be and weigh it against the greater good of the public, the greater laws of the public and the people she is discriminating against. she cannot hold people's civil rights under the constitution hostage because she doesn't agree. everyone is talking about the fact she was thrown in jail. she chose to go there. the use of a contempt order is,
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in order to force somebody to comply. it's not the punisher. it's to force her to comply with a judge's ruling. the judge told her, you have four choices. you either issue the licenses yourself. step out of the way, resign or go to jail. she chose door number four, alisyn and she's going to sit there until she decides to comply. >> they said there's a simple fix to this. take her name off the marriage licenses. then she doesn't appear to be endorsing them? is that legally the right answer? >> absolutely not. you are going to ask every municipality, every city, every state to change their procedures when somebody getting their nickers in a pinch based on a religious belief? that's not the answer. the answer is simple. either kim needs to do her job or not interfere with the clerks
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under her doing their job or resign. >> thank you. great to see you. we would love to hear your take. tweet us, #newdaycnn of facebook.com/newday. >> i think we should go ton a team road trip. this is the time to fill up your tank. our chief business correspondent, christine romans will break it down for us. you can now use freeze it to prevent new purchases on your account in seconds. and once you find it, you can switch it right on again. you're back! freeze it, only from discover. get it at discover.com.
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i was going to the library to do my homework. it was a little bit of a walk to get to the bus stop. i had to wait in line to use the computer. took a lot of juggling to keep it all together. what's possible when you have high-speed internet at home? the library never closes.
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it makes it so much better to do homework when you're at home. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. if you're one of the lucky americans not working this labor day, you may want to make your way to the gas station and fill up. prices at the pump are the labor day weekend low. the lowest in 11 years. christine romans is here with us. 11 years is amazing to think about that. >> what were you doing labor day 2004? >> why are you asking me? i can't do that. >> that's the lowest it's been since then! >> terms of last year it was low but not this low. >> you had oil prices about $100 a barrel.
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oil is a driving factor, pun intended for gas prices. a couple of things happening iran is coming on the market with its own oil when the sanctions are finally lifted, if they are. you have everyone producing oil. the americans, opec companies, producing oil this at the same time and the world is using less oil as china's economy slows a little bit. >> is everybody feeling it? feeling it from california across the country? >> not everyone is feeling it. you have some parts of the midwest with refinery glitches. california has little bit higher prices. in general, you're looking at prices hitting closer to the $2 mark. >> is this something that will last? we wonder this. is it a splurge like we should do it now? >> you know, it has been kind of a wild ride here. this is the most recent. trek over here. this is where we are now. aaa sees $2 gas nationwide by the end of the year.
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you're already seeing it in some places. my local gas station yesterday $2.05. there are people seeing it already. it will be -- i would say a national gas price like a national temperature -- there is no national temperature. gas prices are like that. >> what could i don't know stem this tide, if you will. >> we told you why gas prices are lower and falling. almost everyone expects them to continue to fall. it's my job to forecast what could happen. what could happen. what are the risks? what would be the, you know, unforecastable if you had a hurricane season that was crazy, which we don't have quite yet. if you had refinery shut downs or katrina-like hurricane it can cause gas prices to go up. if opec were to cut production. there's no indication they will. if the big producers pulled back and limited the oversupply, that could drive gas prices back up. and the speculators. when you have people fast, hot
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money in the market that gets a little bit of a fundamental improvement in the supply situation and drives it up because of speculators. that could be something. for now the path of least resistance for gas prices is lower. i think you'll have $2 by halloween or thanksgiving. >> we'll enjoy it while it lasts. >> thank you. that would be the treat in the trick or treat proposition of halloween! a new poll shows that people are feeling the burn more than ever. what changed for the vice president senator and what does it mean? coming up!
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this presidential race is more unsettled than we could have imagined. >> bernie sanders surging past hillary i think the secretary' people are getting nervous. >> for the republicans trump is on top. >> trump is here to stay. >> it's a major problem for bush. >> germany and austria taking in
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thousands but warning they can't keep this up for long. >> more than 13,000 asking for asylum. >> all of us around the world have do do more to help the syrian refugees. breaking his silence after killing cecil the lion. >> possibly going to be extradited. >> he's not even a human being as far as i'm concerned. >> this is "new day" with chris cuomo, allis cuomo. >> good morning. it's september 7th, 8:00 in the east. labor day. hope you have it off today. hillary clinton has her work cut out for her. this is new nbc news poll that shows she's behind bernie sanders in new hampshire. he's also gaining in iowa and there's a new biden bump to explain. >> and for republicans trump is still on top. we have all the kwodevelopments covered for you beginning with
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jeff zellamy. he's in davenport, iowa. >> reporter: hillary clinton is starting the labor day push of her campaign in a different place than she expected. she's the underdog in new hampshire, as you said. bernie sanders is gaining on her here in iowa. let's take a look at the new numbers. in new hampshire now senator sanders has a nine-point lead over hillary clinton. in iowa she has an 11-point lead but it's important to note it's down from 24 points in july. so bernie sand sers gaining ground in both states. one other thing is vice president joe biden as he makes his decision whether to jump into the race or not. she's viewed favorably by seven in ten democratic voters and overall by registered voters including republicans and independents. he has a higher favorability rating than she does. going into the next stretch of the campaign it's a tough road
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for her. she knows it. she said this last night in cedar rapids, iowa. >> it's going to be a hard election. the other side said they'll spend, say, and do anything to win back the white house. i have a little experience with that. i'm absolutely confident whatever they throw at me i can throw it right back. >> reporter: of course, we have seen that before. hillary clinton perhaps at her best when she's in fighting mode. when she has a competitive race on her hands. we saw that in the 2008 campaign. so, chris, as the campaign develops, she's going to show herself in more presidential settings. she's giving an iran speech on wednesday. she's doing to more interviews. she's on "ellen show" this week. this race is on with five months to go before the iowa caucuses. >> i liked your line that it is more unsettled than we thought it would be at this point. jeff, thank you very much. on the gop side, donald trump is still on top with the headlines about who is behind him.
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carson catching up. bush in the weeds, and a new name ascends in new hampshire. we are live in milford, new hampshire. >> reporter: that's right. there's a momentum for donald trump and big trouble for jeb bush. here in new hampshire donald trump keeps his hold with a commanding lead at 28%. he has gained 7 percentage points in the last month. but the number two spot look at john kasich there with 12%. followed by ben carson and ca y ly fo foour renee. certainly it's been a sharp dive in the last month. now on to iowa where donald trump still is in the lead, but ben carson is right on his tails. again here in new hampshire jeb bush really seeing a decline in his numbers. he's only at 6% in iowa. scott walker, too, only at 5%.
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last month he was leading in the polls here in new hampshire. yesterday, though, i caught up with scott walker while he was launching a motorcycle tour through the state and here is how he responded. >> the person who won the primary four years ago was the same point at this point. we have ever confidence there will be ups and downs along the way, but we need to stay true to who we are to get our message out. >> reporter: many candidates will use the labor day holiday to set the reset button on their campaign. one person who does need it is jeb bush. he'll try to do it this week. he's investing half a million dollars into new tv ad campaign here in new hampshire. so certainly he's wanting to get a new start this labor day. >> it sounds like it. thank you so much for that. joining us now to fight about this is cnn political commentator and democratic strategies maria cardona and
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jeffrey. >> great to see you. >> jeffrey let's see how new hampshire democrats are feeling today in the new nbc poll. hillary clinton has gone down by ten points this july. bernie sanders has gone up by ten points this july. is this only because he is the senator from the next door state vermont or is something else going on? >> definitely not. there is something else going on here. i mean, the problem is hillary clinton she's been on the stage for what 20 or 30 years. the problem she's having with her e-mails is really not so much about the e-mails, all though, obviously, that's a problem. but it's about her political character, and the way people view her. we talked, i think, the other way about the words that people free associated with her and at the top was liar. this is her problem. it is a real problem. it has nothing do with bernie
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sanders being from vermont. he's making real progress here. >> it's hard to say it has nothing to do with him being from vermont. maria, you had a funny smile on your face. >> i had an interesting sm inin of course, because this is what republicans say about her and what they have been saying about her day in and day out since the campaign started. look, this is not a surprise. it's not a surprise to hillary. it's not a surprise to the clinton campaign. it does have at lotto lot to d bernie sanders is nearby. no democrat has won new hampshire or iowa with more than 50% unless they from the state. this is what the clinton campaign was predicting. people have thought that the clinton campaign and hillary herself came into this expecting a coronation. in fact, it's been the opposite. it has been the media and the republicans talked about how hillary wanted or expected a
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coronation. history is against this, chris, as you know going into this and expecting for voters to hand over a third democratic term that is not something that history has seen has been easy. so hillary knew from the get go this was going to be a very hard fought proposition. they have baked this into their strategy. >> i want to stick with you for one second. you were her senior advisor during the 2008 campaign. this time around was going to be different. we heard how hillary clinton was going to be more open and assessable. at least when it comes to the media, we haven't seen that yet. and the "ellen show" doesn't count. it really doesn't. >> now you're going to catch a beat. >> i mean, i love ellen as much as the next person. >> she's going to -- >> but, maria, don't you think if hillary clinton was ubiquitous on the media, and we've give her an opportunity to be, wouldn't that be helping?
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>> who is going to make the decision on the election day? the media or voters? what hillary clinton has done from day one is focus her conversation to voters. again, this is always been part of hillary clinton's campaign strategy. to focus on small gatherings, to focus on one-on-one conversations. in 2008 it was all about the ral rallies. it was all about showing she had these big crowds. this time around she wanted to focus on the one on one conversations with voters and these early states. yes, they also understood they have to have conversations with the media. guess what. part of the strategy has been it's not a challenge that she would do that starting after labor day when everybody was paying more attention to the races. >> that was criticized as ducking being tested the way candidates have to be tested along the way. >> there's more than a year left, chris. it's not like the election is next week. >> i know but it sends the message that you will decide
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when you have to answer for your positions. that's all i'm saying. >> the voters will decide. and here is another huge point to this, when she's out on the campaign trail, no voter has asked her about this e-mail issue. >> i know. i've heard that before. how do we vet that? asking her about the issues that can because they want to know what are you doing for me? what are you going to do for my family so we can live a better life? >> let me ask you something, jeffrey, opposite. do you think it's right for donald trump to play victim and say got which to be asked the questions? >> i think it was a gotcha. >> why? >> what is a gotcha so we know the definition we're playing with? >> to ask something the chances are that responded is not going to know. and you nknow that going in. i have a column, chris, coming out in conservative review on
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this that will probably be run today. i've gone back and looked. the implication is that trump was, you know, somehow uninformed or not up to snuff. they said this all through eight years of the reagan administration about president reagan himself. not when he was a candidate but the president that he didn't know anything about arms control and this or that. a times correspondent wrote a whole book in the 1984 saying hs an i thi-- >> thank you so much jeffrey lord and maria cordona. >> happy labor day! and ellen degeneres, i love you. i love your show, and i love your fans. not everybody shares that opinion! >> i love you as well. >> be sure to watch the next
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republican debate hosted by cnn. that means it will be the best debate! went september 16th starting at 9:00 p.m. eastern. thousands of people are expected to pay final respects to the illinois police officer shot and killed last week in the line of duty. you're looking at a live image from illinois. we understand that the casket holding lieutenant joe glinowisc. >> they want to see the casket. we'll show you the pictures.
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this man served 32 years in his community. he's known as g.i. joe. a lot of people are taking this personally. right now police have not been able to capture whoever was involved in this. we know three men who they're looking for in terms who white men and one black man. this community is taking this so personally. with it raining people are still coming out to view the casket. allison? >> thank you so much for showing us that somber scene. meanwhile breaking news this morning. friends announcing it will ta-- france announcing it will take 24,000 refugees. we find cnn's national correspondent arwa damon. tell us what the scene is behind you. >> reporter: it's pretty tense right now. there was fairly big scuffle that broke out between the
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police force here and the refugees who are sick and tired of waiting in these miserable conditions. a number of them lined up over here also waiting to get on the bus. many of them have been waiting out here in this field that was meant to just be a temporary holding area but they have been finding themselves waiting out here for days and at night it gets fairly cold. that has been especially difficult for the children, and if we move over here, we can show you the train tracks that people are following. that is their path from serbia into hungary, and just come over here. i mean, you can see people are still coming.
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what we're seeing is a clear indication that the hungary is unable to handle the massive influx of people. this so called transit camp is basically a handful of tends with no proper shelter. not enough food or water being distributed and no real medical aid for the children. what we're seeing is not just people coming in but some of them so fed up with the situation here they're going back and in some cases, they're going to try to smuggle themselves over, which, of course, lends itself to a whole new series of problems because they are vulnerable when it comes to the smugglers. they are being exploited. and the smugglers certainly don't have their best interests at heart. >> so many have come with so little and the need is so great. arwa, thank you for continuing to show the situation. that will pressure change. overnight crews franticly
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rescued a group of my grants off the coast of turkey. coming days after a body of a syrian refugee toddler washed ashore kind of resonates throughout the world as the desperation -- facing desperation. ivan watson saw the whole thing and joins us live from turkey. what is the movement and the situation from where you are? >> reporter: chris, what we saw last night with volunteers from turkish search and rescue teams working alongside the coast guard to rescue some of these incredibly dangerous rafts, basically a blow up rubber boat that people are using to try to get across the channel from this turkish resort community to the nearby greek island. so i saw a little raft with about 23 people on board that
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could have easily been spunk by a small wave. it had five children packed inside the little raft. and the turkish coast guard rescued them after their motor failed. we saw a second boat rescued by the coast guard. that boat had about 10 people on board including a child. they were paddling with oars trying to get miles to the greek coast. what is even more astounding about this, these people were trying to make the dangerous journey just four days after those photographs emerged of the tragic syrian refugee toddler washed up lifeless on the beach here in turkey. these people, last night, were trying to take the same perilous journey that the family of this little boy tried to take. a family that was doomed. a little 2-year-old, his
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4-year-old brother and mother drowned at sea. the turkish government said they rescued some 50,000 people in the past nine months trying to make this journey. they don't have statistics for the number of people who have died at sea. the rescue workers tell me they've seen at least a dozens children die in these waters in just the last couple of 6 months. >> it gives you their sense of their desperation to flee the war-rave advantaged area. president obama will spend part of his labor day in boston announcing the new executive order requiring federal contractors to offer employees up to seven paid sick days per year. the white house said it could help more than 300,000 workers. the president is also expected to talk about new rules to help federal contract employees negotiate equal pay. an investigation is underway into how a cheetah escaped the enl enclosure at the indianapolis zoo. it prompted an hour long lock
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down on sunday. the cheetah named pounce was found lying in a landscaped area outside the exhibit. behind a barrier keeping it away from the public. a man actually caught it on foot. he ran it down. no. they go 70 miles per hour. the minnesota dentist who killed cecil the lion earlier in summer in zimbabwe is talking to the media about what did and did not happen. walter palmer is emerging saying he plans to go back to work tomorrow and talking about the hunt that made him the most revolting hunter on social media. he's been reluctant to talk but he's opening up. >> he said it's the only interview he's going to do. he sad down with the associated press for 25 minutes over the weekend. essentially asking for privacy for him and his family. he also did not allow any cameras in the interview to take
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pictures or film him during the sit down. breaking his silence in his first interview, the minnesota dentist who sparked an international fire storm after killing cecil the lion on an african safari. walter palmer was kept out of the public eye since killing the 13-year-old beloved big cat in july. telling the associated press he'll be resuming work at his suburban minneapolis practice this tuesday. he said he's, quote, heart broken at the toll this has taken on his dental staff and family saying about his wife and daughter, quote, they've been threatened in the social media and, again, i don't understand that level of humanity to come after people not involved at all. since facing worldwide backlash after the hunt, including a clamoring cry for his extradition by zimbabwe officials, palmer hasn't been charged with a crime. he said he relied on the exp expertise of his guides.
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he insisted the controversial hunt was legal. say if i had known the lion had a name i wouldn't have taken it, obviously. palmer didn't address whether he would return to zimbabwe for questioning. he said i have always followed the laws. doctor palmer is supposed to return to work tomorrow. you can expect protests there as we've been discussing this morning. the police department in bloomington said they will not dedicate resources to his office unless things get out of hand. >> of course, it is unfortunate his children and wife have been brought into this. but it helps to finally hear from him that he acknowledges he made a mistake. >> and certainly i think one of the things we hoped for is to see him express that regret on camera. he hasn't done that. you can expect there will be more anger toward him in the coming days. >> but the end of the day, either what he did was illegal or legal and if they can't make
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a case against him and he said he wasn't trying to target this favorite lion, then it is -- don't you have to leave him alone? >> his attorneys don't expect any charges to be brought up against him. we'll have to wait to see. >> the guides have charges. >> boris, thank you. congress could vote this week on the iran nuclear deal. president obama getting some key support for the controversial agreement. george mitchell is here to talk about that next. just might be the one. to clean the oceans, to start a movement, or lead a country. it may not be obvious yet, but one of these kids is going to change the world. we just need to make sure she has what she needs. welcome to windows 10. the future starts now for all of us.
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i think they'll find over time if it unfolds the way it is designed to unfold, they'll see they have been made more secure by derailing this iranian nuclear program. >> former secretary of state colin powell adding his voice to the chorus of support for the iran nuclear deal. the president has enough votes to secure the deal, but opponents say the agreement will put americans in harm's way. the question is, are they right? we have a former u.s. special envoy to the middle east, former senate majority leader george mitchell. he, too, is saying this deal should be supported. we were discussing before we started the segment you believe those in congress are actually now reading and considering this deal outside of the political vacuum are seeing it as something that is better to do than not do?
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>> what i think they're seeing is there isn't a better alternative. that this represents the best path available to curb iran's nuclear ambitions and prevent iran from achieving a nuclear weapon. >> colin powell says the resistance to the deal assumes that iran wasn't already on a superhighway, as he put it, to creating a nuclear weapon. do you believe that is the true preface? >> the widely accepted version is that iran's break out time, that is the time it would take them to get a weapon if they dropped all pretense and made a dash to do so is now about two to three months. as a result of this agreement, it will be more than a year. so the assuming the worst, if nothing else, this agreement extends dramatically the period of time in which the united states and its allies would to act to prevent iran from getting
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a weapon if they tried to break out. >> do they get too much in this deal? do they get too much money? too much time? too much freedom? did they out negotiate those at the table for the u.s.? >> not at all. look, in an negotiation between adversaries, each side gives up something. now, the iranians didn't want to reduce their enriched uranium by 98%. they didn't want to reduce their operating centrifuges by two-thirds. they didn't want to limit themselves to enriching only the 3.67% far below weapons grade. they didn't want to disable the heavy water plant that could produce plutonium. the ayatollah said many times the single most important objective was to have sanctions end on the day the agreement was signed. they didn't get that. the sanctions end only after they verify bli take all the
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actions in the agreement. they didn't get all they want and we didn't get all we want. i think if there's an argument against the agreement it's that it's not permanent. it doesn't exist in perpetuity. there are time limits they vary from 10 to 25 years. that has to be acknowledged as something less than desirable from our standpoint. when you weigh it against the alternatives, opponents say they could have gotten a better deal. that has been said about every agreement i've ever been involved in in private or public life. if you just stayed at it, you would have gotten a better deal. it's clear this is the best deal possible. keep in mind this, chris, this is not just the united states and iran. on our side of the table, are china, russia, britain, france and germany. >> all of whom want to do trade in some form or another with iran. >> that's exactly right. they will not agree to further sanctions or increasing
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sanctions. so the principle argument by the opponent we walk away increase the sanctions and iran will come falling back. that's not the case. the sanctions are going to erode in any event. if the agreement is rejected and the sanctions erode,line get their principle objective and end of sanctions without doing anything. >> what about the israeli calls saying you're giving the ability of our biggest enemy to kill us? >> that's a serious concern. iran does pose a direct threat to israel, but keep in mind even within israel there is a substantial body of opinion that favors the agreement in just the last few weeks on american national television the two former heads. a respected and iconic figure in israeli intelligence have come out in favor of the agreement as have many military people. everybody in israel is very deeply concerned about iran, as
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they should be, there's a body of opinion that supports the agreement. there's another opinion that doesn't ever appear on american television and that's world opinion. all 15 countries of the u.n. security council support the agreement, and almost all countries in the world who have taken a position on the agreement support it. this has broad-based support around the world. >> let me ask you something else that seems to be a call. the absence of outrage about the refugee/migrant crisis. i get the legal distinction. i get the distinction for the u.n. high commissioner. but when you leave with just a hefty bag with your belongings, whatever the motivation is, it's not good. they need help. there's been an arguably cliche but deafening true silence on this. why? >> the problem is so overwhelming. there is no apparent immediate end to it because it is so heartbreaking to people to see
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these immaages on television. it has a powerful opinion in public opinion here and around the world. you have separate it in two cat dwo -- categories. if somebody is hurt on the road you don't get into issues then. you help them. help them get to a hospital then you deal with the issue of how did it happen, how can we better it? >> do you think there's a chilling effect in the u.s. right now because of the ongoing immigration narrative and the ongoing hostilities toward immigrants that people aren't jumping up to help these people? >> of course, this is occurring in a context in which there's a great deal of hostility to further immigration into the united states, as evidenced by the campaign and the poll results you're showing on television and elsewhere. so clearly that does have an effect. but i think that you have to keep in mind it's a long range issue and it's going get worse.
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let me cite a couple of figures. >> please. >> there are 7.5 billion people in the world today. one in five is muslim. that's a billion and a half. in the middle of the century as the population of the world edges toward 10 billion. one in three will be muslim. 3.5 billion which is the total population of the world as recently as 1970. islam has many internal divisions the principle one being sunni versus shia. populations are rising rapidly in the world of islam. governments are incapable, in many cases of dealing with the internal issues of providing inclusive government as we understand it. you're going to be seeing a continuing turmoil and tush lance and coming up with a longer range solution which helps them improve their
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circumstances at home can keep down the flow of refugees clearly has to be part of any approach at this problem. >> senator, thank you very much for your perspective on these issues. we'll continue to discuss them. great perspective to get there. kim davis is waking up in jail again today, but could this be the kentucky clerk's last day behind bars after she refused to issue same-sex marriage licenses? the latest on her appeal coming up.
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hampshire. bernie sanders is leading by nine points in the latest poll. on the republican side donald trump still on top. france is ready to take in 24,000 new refugees as part of a proposal that would see the e.u. take in 120,000 refugees over the next two years. funeral services underway today for lieutenant joe gliniewicz. the illinois police officer shot and killed last week. thousands are expected to pay their final respects. meanwhile authorities are looking for those suspects still. president obama will spend part of his labor day in boston announcing his new executive order requiring federal contractors to offer employees up to seven paid sick days per year. the dentist who killed cecil the lion talking to reporters for the first time about that hunt. dr. walter palmer telling the associated press he'll return to work tomorrow and insist that the hunt was indeed legal. for more on the five things to know visit newdaycnn.com for the
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latest. the case of kim davis, the clerk refusing to issue same-sex marriage licenses heating up in kentucky. attorneys appealing her release from the jail where she's been for four days. we turn to alexander field for more. >> reporter: the clerk refuses to give out the same-sex marriage licenses. she refuses to resign from her job, that has landed her in contempt of court, according to a judge. she has been remanded to the custody of the u.s. martial. her attorney is filing an appeal saying mrs. davis is entitled to proper notice and due notice when she's threatened with the loss of her freedom. there's no indication she will be incarcerated. we'll be asking for an expedited ruling. kim davis mouth dropped open when the judge said she would be going to jail. the judge was in a position to issue a fine instead but didn't think it would be sufficient in enforcing to comply.
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the move to send davis to jail has been seen as controversial by her supporters including republican candidate mike huckabee who is going to visit her in jail later this week. >> the ruling class has thumbed their nose at the constitution. when is it that liberals get to choose which laws they support but a county clerk in kentucky who acting on her christian faith is criminalized, jailed without bail because she acted on her conscience. >> davis says that her religious believes preclude her from being able to issue the licenses. while she sits in jail, a judge ordered five of her deputy clerks to issue the licenses instead. that means that same-sex couples are going to pick up the licenses. they didn't want to see kim davis go to jail, they wanted to get the licenses. they've got their licenses now and they'll be able to get married. >> they seem to be at an impasse in kentucky.
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she's not backing down. the judge at the moment isn't backing down. we'll see what the appeal brings. >> she picked going to jail. she picked it. she was given options. she picked this to go to jail. she picked it. >> a judge brought her attorney back into the courtroom and said this is up to kim davis. on the very day he remanded her to custody marshalls. she can authorize the licenses or not interfere with the deputy clerks. she said she doesn't want her name on the licenses. >> that's fine. the law says that you leave the job. she's a victim only of her believes. >> hthey believe they've got a fight they can take to the governor or the legislature which could result they feel in getting the licenses changed. so that the county clerk's name wouldn't necessarily have to be on it and the licenses wouldn't
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necessarily be issued under the name of the county clerk's office. but this is something for the legislature to take up. and the legislature doesn't reconvene for another few months. >> interesting. thank you so much for that update. maybe you've seen this photograph it has gone viral. a texas teen helping protect the deputy as she gassed up her car. not wanting to become a victim. we're talking to both of them live coming up. there they are. just might be the one. to clean the oceans, to start a movement, or lead a country. it may not be obvious yet, but one of these kids is going to change the world. we just need to make sure she has what she needs. welcome to windows 10. the future starts now for all of us. have you touched the stuff?.
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. i want you to take a look at this picture that is going viral. deputy constable tommy jones kelly posted it on facebook after the teen asked if he could back up for her as she refuelled her car. his actions following the shooting death of darren goforth was killed at the nearby gas station a week ago. the two of them officer kelley and mckinley zoellner join us now. the two of you joining us this morning. mckinley, you're a 16-year-old
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teen other things on your mind, i would imagine. what made you want to stand and provide back up to this deputy tommi jones kelley? >> all the hate toward police these days. somebody needs to show them they care. >> i imagine you felt like somebody had your back. i'm sure it probably made you wonder what was going on, deputy. how did you feel when mckinley walked up to you? what was your initial i are reaction? >> initially i was defensive. being approached from behind and considering the shootings that just happened, you hear a voice come up behind you, you're defensive initially. >> have you been a bit app hencihenc app hencive on the job lately? >> we're more aware, yes. >> i can imagine. what did you say to mckinley after he offered to provide you back up? >> he asked if he could make
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sure i was safe, and i told him i said, yeah. i pumped my gas and he proceeded to stay there. >> mckinley, i understand you were with your mom at the time. what did she think of the gestu gesture? >> well, of course she was honestly proud of me. she was the one that saw officer kelley at the gas pump. she asked if i wanted to go over there. >> i understand you have family members on the force, correct? >> yes. >> do you think this gave you more of a heart for the issue or more what you're seeing going on in the world around you? >> probably more what i was see i ing. >> what have you been hearing from people in your community, mckinley? >> a lot of people are saying they're glad they know me. a lot of people are praising it saying a lot of good things. >> deputy, i know you shared the
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selfie, if you will, on facebook page. are you surprised it went viral? >> yes, ma'am, i did. i was very surprised. it was just really to give him some good recognition for being a good kid. young man. >> absolutely. he showed his manhood, if you will, in terms of the man and the character he has. so what is your take away from this encounter with mckinley? >> he's an awesome kid. i plan to keep in touch with him. he's an incredible kid. >> i'm sure mckinley you're thinking about your future. any plans to go toward law enforcement? >> i was first going to go into the air force after high school, and then get my degree in criminal justice, so after i got out that was my plan to do something in the law enforcement field, yes. >> that plan hasn't changed, has it? >> no. >> okay. good. well, we salute you for your
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compassion and your integrity. we appreciate you both joining us, especially it's just a week since you lost your colleague, deputy. we send your condolences to you and the other members of your department. thank you for joining us today. especially for the uplifting story. all right, allison, over to you. well, back by popular demand the cnn quiz show is back! pitting anchor against anchor to see who knows the most about the paid yum we work in. that's television. we have the whole low down on the showdown next.
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hard. >> i hope they study! the quiz show is back! returning champions tonight! the two knuckle heads join to test their tv knowledge. i say it with all due respect. you had bill weir. you had jake tapper. >> yeah! >> what made you choose chris? >> our wonderful tv partner? >> i've had a lot of good television husbands but i can say that chris is the best. >> he's competitive. >> he's smart. >> he watches a lot of tv. >> we all know each other. we're actually all married. it helps. we can finish each other's sentences. >> we're the only real team tonight. you judge for yourselves when you watch. don and john hate each other. >> no! >> they love each other! >> they had a fight before -- >> they sing songs together. here is the thing, you think she
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doesn't study enough. >> that's not true. she studies and yells at me for not preparing. i decided i will not prepare. i will go in and be brazenly stupid. >> good strategy. >> because you were both playing. everybody is playing for charity. you actually want to win. >> yeah. >> when you get things wrong she hits! she gets upset. >> i did. >> i will growl if need be. >> you can watch all the action tonight, guys. don't turn away. 8 p.m. eastern. >> it is rigged! rigged! >> they can bring the title hom home. >> firefighterers, we all know they go above and beyond the call of duty. they do it in a beautiful way to help save a marine's homecoming. it's the good stuff and then some. check it out after the break. mobile technology, inf but it is not the device that is mobile, it is you.
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stuff! the family -- that's right. the family of marine daniel driver was going to throw him a surprise homecoming party. the oven catches fire. the warwick fire department puts out the flames. it wasn't the only way they came to the rescue. the firefighters find out about the celebration. now they can't cook and guy is coming home from basic training? what do they do? gather money, go out and buy the family all the things they need to celebrate. cook a lot of the food themselves. the driver family was touched by the generosity of the firefighters that saved their day two times! >> that's awesome. firefighters know how to cook! well done. >> very good good stuff. >> phil is supposed to give us stage direction and he's not out here right now. meanwhile time for
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"newsroom" with carol costello. >> happy labor day! >> chris that was -- i like that. >> i love when you speak italian! >> that's the good stuff. >> yeah. "newsroom" starts now. happening now in the news room picnic? the president celebrates labor day by signing an executive order forcing employers to pay for sick leave. hundreds of thousands of workers affected. will republicans respond? also, thousands of migrants flooding in but germany and austria say they can't keep taking them in such high numbers. the pope pressures catholics to open their doors. and talk about a tackle. a ref level during a high school football game. was it on purpose? let's talk. live in the cnn

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